A playlist of potential 'songs of the summer'

Friday, July 11, 2014 - Updated: 7:35 AM

It's that hot and sticky time of year when everybody absolutely must know what the song of the summer is.

It could be "Happy," the Pharrell Williams mega-hit that actually came out on the "Despicable Me 2" soundtrack in June of last year but just spent 10 straight weeks atop the Hot 100.

More likely, it's "Problem," the hard-to-get-out of your head hip-pop collaboration between former teen star Ariana Grande and Australian rapper Iggy Azalea. Or maybe it's "Fancy," another track with Azalea's name on it that currently tops the Billboard chart.

But we come not to crown one defining song, but to serve up a multi-genre playlist of bright and sunny (and occasionally dark and gloomy) summer songs in which the musical moods of the season are encapsulated.

They can also be streamed. The entire 26-song list is up on Spotify, and can be accessed through my "In the Mix" blog at www.inquirer.com/inthemix.

1. "Love Never Felt So Good," Michael Jackson. The King of Pop is dead, but has new music on the radio. "Xscape," his "contemporized" posthumous album, is mostly an exercise in pointless necrophilia, but this duet with Justin Timberlake is a dreamy summer jam.

2. "Come Get It Bae," Pharrell Williams. "Happy" didn't need to be on this list. You can walk the boardwalk and hear "Happy" three times an hour. This similarly elastic slice of pop-funk gives Pharrell yet another hit.

4. "Do It Again," Royskopp & Robyn. Smart Scandinavian dance-music team of a pair of Norwegian beatmakers and a Swedish singer, out now with a five-song EP.

5. "I Will Never Let You Down," Rita Ora. Written by then-boyfriend Calvin Harris, this is the great pop song that should turn British singer Ora into a star in the United States. It promises too-good-to-be-true happy times ahead.

6. "Summer," Calvin Harris. The Scottish EDM star gets the last word in, of course, on this driving dance track that turns out to be a bummer with a rubbery beat. In his telling, naturally, it was her fault, not his.

7. "Seasons (Waiting On You)," Future Islands. Nobody works up a sweat like Future Islands singer Samuel T. Herring, but this Baltimore synth-pop band, enjoying a break-out year, always keep the music shiny and cool.

13. "Fancy," Iggy Azalea, featuring Charli XCX. The time-honored cultural appropriation debate in 2014 is embodied by Azalea, who hails from Down Under and raps in irony-free exaggerated patois as if she grew up in South Central Los Angeles. She has only one weapon with which to defend herself from charges of minstrelsy: Hits.

14. "Don't Stop," 5 Seconds of Summer. "She Looks So Perfect" is the current smash, but that song's line about "American Apparel underwear" is too creepy (in the wake of the Dov Charney sexual-predator news) to land in this mix. This ditty from these Aussie pop punk lads will have to do.

15. "I Don't Know You Anymore," Bob Mould. Post-punk legend and former Hüsker Dü leader Mould is at the top of his game on this Wall of Sound rager from the fab new CD "Beauty & Ruin."

16. "Goshen 97," Strand of Oaks. Philadelphia songwriter Timothy Showalter lays his heart on the line on this recollection of making teenage rock 'n' roll in the basement, with an assist from J Mascis of Dinosaur Jr.

24. "Hard to Be an Outlaw," Willie Nelson. Speaking of bros, Shotgun Willie takes a shot at faux hillbillies on this track penned by Billy Joe Shaver, whose forthcoming album will also include the song: "The record people nowadays keep spinning round and round / They sing about the backroads they never have been down." From the 81-year-old Nelson's impressive "Band of Brothers."

25. "U Get Me High," Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers. Petty is back in a swoony groove on this encouraging track from "Hypnotic Eye," due this month.

26. "An Ocean in Between the Waves," the War On Drugs. Before you jump in the water, you have to get to the beach. There's no better driving music to be heard in 2014 than "Lost in the Dream," the transfixing fourth album by Philly's own the War on Drugs. So let's ride it out on the wave of these superb seven minutes, shall we?